Personally....I am going to chalk it up to models. I mean, even beyond the diversity in skin color, the Mandos all had the same face and wore the same stupid jumpsuit, whereas the Onderonians have a wide array of detailed clothing.

New Mandalorians - True ones are dead and all and I don’t really think that it was what they were getting at with making some of the people blond and blue eyed. Though yes it is a little iffy.

No, I meant the ones who looked like Maori. The Death Watch in the larger EU was menacing Mandalorian civilians before this anyway.

I believe the Nazi allusions are deliberate in TCL primarily because it's not just the blond and blue eyes but also the haircuts, the rhetoric, and the fact the series is ridiculously fond of allusions.

is not that another type of lack of diversity?

"Naziesque" as the default bad guy? Why not a GFFA version of American antibellum aristocracy? Or ________-mans "Burden" of imperious expansionsim? Makes you almost miss the days of default russkie badguys from the cold war era! Look they space nazis!

I know George Lucas is a Babyboomer and that generation was a direct spawn of World War II generation but fiction and well as fiction writers need to expand their horizons.

That was one of the worst elements of TCW's Mandalorian-based changes. The damage to the planet was a stupid and unnecessary but superficial thing, and though the introduction of pacifism was ham-fisted in its delivery, it was an interesting concept.

But prior to TCW, the Mandalorians were one of the most diverse societies in all of Star Wars. There were humans and aliens living together in equality: Calibops were on the same footing as Bothans, Togorians side by side with Devaronians, and Humans treated the same as Mandallians. The humans themselves were of multiple real world ethnicities. Black, white, Maori...with red hair, and blonde hair, and black hair, and multi-colored eyes. And even then, race had no real importance to the people themselves. Families were not only interracial, but interspecies. A black father who had adopted a white son, and a white father who had adopted Maori sons and a Twi'lek daughter. Gender role expectations were identical, too. Men and women were both allowed to be soldiers, parents, craftsmen, farmers—anyone could be anything. And homosexuality was not only tolerated, but fully integrated and welcome.

TCW was awful in that regard. The New Mandalorian Royal Guard are explicitly all men, and the police have all been male as well. Not even Death Watch had any female members until Katee Sackhoff was cast and they could replicate her model. Instead of a diverse crowd of aliens, every one is human. Not a single person of color, either: everyone is white. Fair skin, blue eyes, and blonde hair are the overwhelming majority, with a brunette sprinkled here and there, and only a single person with red hair. And it was a specific choice to make everyone so, as revealed in the Creating Mandalore featurette from Season 2's DVDs. They decided Mandalore was going to be the white planet. And that sucks.

I am curious, seriously, whether there was anything racist about the Space Mongolians other than the fact they're Space Mongolians.

Are you referring to the Ming Po when you say Space Mongolians?

The racist issue is that when they make these visually Asian characters, or black character in the case of Adi Gallia, to be something other than human, the implicit message is that white is the human norm and those who do not conform to that are somehow alien.

The racist issue is that when they make these visually Asian characters, or black character in the case of Adi Gallia, to be something other than human, the implicit message is that white is the human norm and those who do not conform to that are somehow alien.

Wouldn't a better message be taken from that that aliens and humans are identical so there's no need to create arbitrary labels?

The racist issue is that when they make these visually Asian characters, or black character in the case of Adi Gallia, to be something other than human, the implicit message is that white is the human norm and those who do not conform to that are somehow alien.

Wouldn't a better message be taken from that that aliens and humans are identical so there's no need to create arbitrary labels?

Sure, credit goes to them for making Ahsoka a non-Human, but that's an entirely separate argument. What Bella and others are emphasizing is how incredibly problematic it is to create a culture of white Aryan Humans and call them Human, and then to create a culture of Asian Humans and call them not Human. It's a reflection of an out-of-date Occidental, colonial, and even racist idea that white is the norm, and that's a very different discussion than the "We need more non-Human main characters" one. Making Ahsoka a Togruta may say "Racism in the Star Wars universe is bad," but making the Ming Po non-Human is saying "Racism in the real world is OK."

The sw.com profiles on Satine, Almec, and that loser kid all say Human. But given how subject everything is to whim and revisionism on that show, even Obi-Wan might end up being a member of the Stewjonian species by next month.

Species traits aren't the same as demonyms. It would be different if they said Ming Po was the name the people referred to themselves as, while genetically they were still human. Instead, they decreed that all of these people were of a different species entirely, which itself is known as the Ming Po race. They could theoretically save themselves with a later retcon clarification that that's what they had been intending, but just based on the way these things have been handled previously, it's much more likely that the powers that be don't even see the mistake they've made, and if they do, don't see it as a legitimate mistake that would require fixing.

Also, the Nightsisters are actually a religion, and therefore like the Mandalorians, theoretically open to anyone who elects to join the group.